www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

SUBSCRIBE TO NEW SCIENTIST

Advertising

Environment

Home |Environment |Science in Society | News

Fall of Roman Empire linked to wild shifts in climate

Centuries of unpredictable climate may have been partly to blame for the fall of the western Roman Empire. A detailed record of 2500 years of European climate has uncovered several links between changing climate and the rise and fall of civilisations.

Climate fluctuation was a contributing factor alongside political failures and barbarian invasions, says Ulf Büntgen of the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research in Birmensdorf, Switzerland, who led the project.

Büntgen used tree rings to build up a history of European climate. Using nearly 9000 samples from oak, pine and larch, Büntgen and colleagues were able to reconstruct how temperatures and rainfall in western Europe changed over the last 2500 years.

Climate flips and Black Death

From AD 250 to 550, the climate flipped, from one decade to the next, between dry and cool, and warm and wet. "Such decadal changes seem to have the most impact" on civilisations, Büntgen says, because they harm agriculture but are not prolonged enough for people to adapt their behaviour.

The climatic turmoil coincided with political upheaval and waves of human migrations. By AD 500, the western Roman Empire had fallen.

In other notable periods, the relatively stable medieval society was characterised by more constant climatic conditions. But the Black Death coincided with a wet spell and the disease spreads faster in humid conditions

Cold wars

"Relatively modest changes in European climate in the past have had profound implications for society," says Michael Mann of Penn State University in University Park, Pennsylvania.

Other studies have shown how war and climate are often intimately tied. For example, periods of unusually cold weather in China during the last millennium are thought to be linked to major bouts of warfare.

That said, it is difficult to draw conclusions for the present day from studies like Büntgen's. As Halvard Buhaug of the Peace Research Institute Oslo in Norway points out: "Modern societies are not nearly as dependent on the climate, because trade and technology can mitigate its effects."

Whether or not African civil wars today can be linked to modern climate change is the subject of intense debate.

Huge sample size

Büntgen and his colleagues used over 7284 oak tree samples from low-lying areas of France and Germany to obtain a record of spring rainfall, and 1089 Stone pines samples and 457 larches samples from high in the Austrian Alps to determine summer temperatures.

Others, including Mann, have used similar methods to put together detailed reconstructions of global temperatures during the last 1000 years. Going back 2500 years is "a very substantial contribution," says Mann.

Journal reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1197175

print
send

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

Have your say

Only subscribers may leave comments on this article. Please log in.

Only personal subscribers may leave comments on this article

Subscribe now to comment.

All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.

If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.

print
send
Outlook is bleak (Image: Carlos Gotay/Getty)

Outlook is bleak (Image: Carlos Gotay/Getty)

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertising

Female crickets fall for serenades of younger males

14:51 14 January 2011

The songs of older males almost always fall on deaf insect ears when they have young rivals

Vacuum of space no match for the mighty radish

13:03 14 January 2011

Radish, lettuce and wheat plants can survive for at least half an hour in a near vacuum, showing a resilience known in only a few other forms of life

Crystal sieves could make oil sands greener

10:06 14 January 2011

Naturally occurring crystals could help scrub greenhouse gases from fossil fuels

Can DNA reveal invasive aliens?

16:37 13 January 2011

Environmental DNA evidence is being rolled out on a grand scale in the US to track invasive species, but the nation's legal system is lagging

Latest news

Antipsychotic drug prescriptions triple in the US

12:00 15 January 2011

Doctors are prescribing too many expensive antipsychotic drugs, often for conditions where there is little evidence they work, say US researchers

Coriolis-like effect found 184 years before Coriolis

22:33 14 January 2011

A 17th-century priest trying to prove that the Earth is fixed in space described an effect similar to the one that deflects the planet's ocean currents

Car batteries run on relativity

20:57 14 January 2011

The lead-acid batteries that power car starters get about 80 per cent of their voltage from relativistic effects on electrons zipping around lead nuclei

Waiting game in flood-hit São Paulo

19:00 14 January 2011

Water is the order of the day as passengers wait for trains in a flooded station in São Paulo, Brazil

TWITTER

New Scientist is on Twitter

Get the latest from New Scientist: sign up to our Twitter feed

For exclusive news and expert analysis, subscribe to New Scientist.

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertising
Advertising
© Copyright Reed Business Information Ltd.
Advertising
Quantcast